Showing posts with label corpses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label corpses. Show all posts

Friday, January 11, 2013

Fascinated By Flesh-Eaters

"Carnivorous plants draw the attention of teenage boys.  They're gardening's macho guys.  Types of carnivorous plants are Venus Flytraps, Pitcher Plants (North American and Tropical), Cape Sundews, Butterworts and Bladderworts.  These plants need prey/insect meat, guts, feces - everything those corpses offer - to survive.  They are possessed of evil tentacles, hairs or 'fangs' that glom on to trespassers and won't let go.  Of the 250,000 known species of flowering plants only 630 are carnivorous."

From Philadelphia Inquirer, Friday, January 11, 2013, Page D1, Home + Design

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Body Decomposition Lab Workshop? Corpse Breakdown Analysis. Crime Museum.

Rigor Mortis, Mummification, Liver Mortis, Skin Slippage, Insects Eat Cadavers, Death Gases.  Whoa!      What processes take place after a body becomes a corpse?:




Try This: The Crime Museum offers classes in decomposition

By Kris Coronado, Published: July 12

Warning: The scenes described in this piece are not for the queasy. Get grossed out by putrefying corpses? Stop reading here.
Otherwise, step into the basement of the Crime Museum, where Theo Kouts is spouting gruesome facts every few minutes.
“When you die, gases are released,” says the 24-year-old crime-scene-investigation educator. “Insects can actually sense them within minutes of death. Female flies will sense them almost immediately, and they will start going to the body, trying to lay eggs, breaking down the body.”
(I warned you. Put that sandwich down.)
Kouts is leading the museum’s Body Decomposition Lab. The 50-minute course details what processes take place after a person, well, becomes a corpse. Twenty-four students sit at folding tables in a glass-walled “classroom” that’s usually the set of “America’s Most Wanted.”
The lab is one of 10 the museum began offering to the public in mid-June. Launched in 2009 as an educational tool for students, the labs are now open to anyone who wants to attend. Courses range from forensic anthropology to a workshop on blood and DNA. Visitors may buy tickets ahead of time or (if they’re still available) snag them at the museum itself, as did Nancy Goodman of Ridgewood, N.J.
After watching real-life trials on tele­vision, the 61-year-old understands that forensic investigators’ jobs are far from easy. “It’s hard to analyze,” she says. “You realize sometimes they don’t know too much.”
She needn’t worry. Although Kouts touches on such familiar subjects as rigor mortis and mummification, it isn’t long before he begins explaining terms that are both befuddling and icky.
• Livor mortis: When the heart stops beating, capillaries and veins leak blood, which then pools and leaves patterns on the body based on the pull of gravity.
• Skin slippage: Oh, you guessed it. It’s when skin starts sliding off the body. Stomach churning yet?
After displaying images depicting such states on a flat-screen behind him, Kouts gives a discourse on what, when and how insects eat cadavers. He’s not trying to gross out the group but is explaining how forensic entomology (i.e. the study of insects in a legal application) helps investigators determine the general time of death based on the maturation of fly eggs, larvae and pupae found in or around the body.
Kouts directs everyone to the stapled case files he passed out at the beginning of the course, detailing a scenario of a couple found killed in a cabin. He hands out to each table a series of closed glass vials containing flies in different phases of life. The task is to determine the latest stage of insect development. Investigators then use this information — coupled with the body heat of the victim — to calculate a range for the time of death. “Don’t count the adult fly,” Kouts advises. “Remember, that could have been the first guy there.” After some multiplying and dividing, the class concludes that the fictional pair have been dead from five to eight hours.
With no further questions, the class is theoretically dismissed. As the rest of the participants head out to explore the museum, 22-year-old University of Maryland grad student Katie Reid offers up her thoughts on the lab: “I think it’s interesting to understand how the decomposition of bodies not only tells the story of death,” she says, “but it also tells the story of life.”

Thank you Washington Post

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Corpses As Dolls

There's so much to consider about death, real and imagined.  And then there are just plain macabre stories.     In Russia a 45-year-old man was arrested today for digging up corpses.  He dressed them up doll-like in stockings and dresses and placed them around his apartment.  The corpses were all female and they had died years ago between the ages of 15 to 26.  He made one look like a teddy bear.  He sometimes slept in a coffin or on graveyard benches.  Imagine  him actually digging up the bodies and then carrying them back to his apartment.  How did he keep the bodies from decomposing?  It was his parents who discovered the bodies.  Norman Bates of Psycho comes to mind.   I have heard many stories of people not reporting a loved ones' death because they did not want to be a lonely survivor.  Often the survivor will dress up the deceased, talk to them and prop them up in chairs, etc.

Talking about macabre, how about a 36-year-old woman in the Bronx.  She was caring for a 76-year-old man in her apartment.  He died in the apartment.  She was afraid she would get in trouble so she wrapped his body in plastic and put it in a suitcase.   She then took the suitcase to the rear of an abandoned building nearby and left the suitcase there.  She placed a small handwritten sign on the suitcase: "Rest in Peace."